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  • Residents watch from the higher ground as the rising waters...

    Tribune news service

    Residents watch from the higher ground as the rising waters from Mountain Creek surround their homes in the Willow Bend Mobile Home park in Grand Prairie, Texas.

  • The flooded Whole Earth Provisions Company on Lamar Street is...

    Drew Anthony Smith / Getty Images

    The flooded Whole Earth Provisions Company on Lamar Street is shown after days of heavy rain on May 25, 2015 in Austin, Texas.

  • Floodwaters overrun the banks of the bayou in downtown Houston...

    Pat Sullivan, AP

    Floodwaters overrun the banks of the bayou in downtown Houston on May 26, 2015.

  • Water steams over the White Rock Lake spillway in Dallas.

    Tribune news service

    Water steams over the White Rock Lake spillway in Dallas.

  • Lamar Street is open again May 25, 2015, after days...

    Drew Anthony Smith, Getty Images

    Lamar Street is open again May 25, 2015, after days of heavy rain in Austin, Texas.

  • Water levels reach the base of a well-known statue of...

    James Gregg, AP

    Water levels reach the base of a well-known statue of Stevie Ray Vaughan along the banks of Lady Bird Lake in Austin, Texas, on May 25. 2015.

  • Vehicles are left stranded on a flooded Interstate 45 in...

    AARON M. SPRECHER / AFP/Getty Images

    Vehicles are left stranded on a flooded Interstate 45 in Houston, Texas on May 26, 2015.

  • Children wade through a flooded street as the waters from...

    Smiley N. Pool / TNS

    Children wade through a flooded street as the waters from Mountain Creek rise in the Willow Bend mobile home park on Sunday, May 24, 2015, in Grand Prairie, Texas.

  • Christopher Canales plays with a squirt gun May 26, 2015,...

    Sarah A. Miller, AP

    Christopher Canales plays with a squirt gun May 26, 2015, outside his home that was damaged by falling trees in Henderson, Texas.

  • Rescue personnel grab the hand of a man stranded in...

    Alberto Martinez, TNS

    Rescue personnel grab the hand of a man stranded in rushing water at the northwest corner of Lamar Boulevard and 15th Street in Austin, Texas, on May 25, 2015.

  • A man walks May 26, 2015, along the Blanco River...

    Eric Gay, AP

    A man walks May 26, 2015, along the Blanco River where sweeping floodwaters overturned vehicles and knocked down Cypress trees in Wimberley, Texas.

  • A man walks past a cabin May 26, 2015, that...

    Elaine Thompson, AP

    A man walks past a cabin May 26, 2015, that was torn from its foundation in a flood on the Blanco River in Wimberley, Texas.

  • Franki Lopez, center, mops muddy flood water from her families...

    Erika Rich / AP

    Franki Lopez, center, mops muddy flood water from her families home in the Blanco Gardens neighborhood of San Marcos, Texas, with the help of family friends Sunday, May 24, 2015, in San Marcos, Texas.

  • Vehicles left stranded on a flooded Interstate 45 in Houston,...

    AARON M. SPRECHER / AFP/Getty Images

    Vehicles left stranded on a flooded Interstate 45 in Houston, Texas on May 26, 2015.

  • The Iron wood group workers clear debris from the Silver...

    Ricardo B. Brazziell / AP

    The Iron wood group workers clear debris from the Silver Springs Apartments in North Austin, Texas, Sunday, May 24, 2015. Record rainfall was wreaking havoc across a swath of the U.S. Midwest on Sunday, causing flash floods in normally dry riverbeds, spawning tornadoes and forcing at least 2,000 people to flee.

  • Vehicles are left stranded on Texas State Highway 288 in...

    Aaron M. Sprecher, AFP/Getty Images

    Vehicles are left stranded on Texas State Highway 288 in Houston, Texas, on May 26, 2015.

  • Magdiel Paz trims damage trees at the Silver Springs Apartments...

    Ricardo B. Brazziell / AP

    Magdiel Paz trims damage trees at the Silver Springs Apartments in North Austin, Texas, Sunday, May 24, 2015. Record rainfall was wreaking havoc across a swath of the U.S. Midwest on Sunday, causing flash floods in normally dry riverbeds, spawning tornadoes and forcing at least 2,000 people to flee.

  • Roberto Salas, left, and Lewis Sternhagen check a flooded car...

    Marie D. De Jesus, AP

    Roberto Salas, left, and Lewis Sternhagen check a flooded car on the frontage road between South Loop West Freeway and South Post Oak Road near the Willow Waterhole Bayou on May 26, 2015, in Houston.

  • The foundation and stilts of a home near the Blanco...

    Rodolfo Gonzalez, TNS

    The foundation and stilts of a home near the Blanco River are all that's left after the home was swept away early Sunday.

  • The cement stilts of a home are all that remain...

    Rodolfo Gonzalez, TNS

    The cement stilts of a home are all that remain after the home was swept away by the Blanco River early Sunday morning during a flash flood in Wimberley, Texas.

  • A destroyed car is submerged May 26, 2015, in the...

    Jay Janner, TNS

    A destroyed car is submerged May 26, 2015, in the Blanco River in Wimberley, Texas.

  • Cars remain stranded along a flooded section of Interstate 45...

    David J. Phillip / AP

    Cars remain stranded along a flooded section of Interstate 45 after heavy rains overnight in Houston, Tuesday, May 26, 2015.

  • Water is seen at the top of a sign along...

    Aaron M. Sprecher, AFP/Getty Images

    Water is seen at the top of a sign along a bike path near Memorial Drive in Houston, Texas on May 26, 2015.

  • Flood waters spread across Zilker park near downtown Austin, Texas,...

    James Gregg / AP

    Flood waters spread across Zilker park near downtown Austin, Texas, on May 25, 2015.

  • Kyle and Mark Ziegler look down at the rushing waters...

    Deborah Cannon, TNS

    Kyle and Mark Ziegler look down at the rushing waters of Williamson Creek from the South 1st Street bridge May 25, 2015, in Austin, Texas.

  • People walk by a damaged roof at the Silver Springs...

    Ricardo B. Brazziell / AP

    People walk by a damaged roof at the Silver Springs Apartments in North Austin, Texas, Sunday, May 24, 2015. Record rainfall was wreaking havoc across a swath of the U.S. Midwest on Sunday, causing flash floods in normally dry riverbeds, spawning tornadoes and forcing at least 2,000 people to flee. (Ricardo B. Brazziell/Austin American-Statesman via AP) AUSTIN CHRONICLE OUT, COMMUNITY IMPACT OUT, INTERNET AND TV MUST CREDIT PHOTOGRAPHER AND STATESMAN.COM, MAGS OUT

  • David Barry consoles his 5-year-old daughter, Marley, while she tries...

    Erika Rich / AP

    David Barry consoles his 5-year-old daughter, Marley, while she tries to sleep in a flood evacuee room created at the San Marcos Activity Center, Sunday May 24, 2015, in San Marcos, Texas.

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This week’s record rainfall in Texas eased the state’s drought and swelled rivers and lakes to the point that they may not return to normal levels until July, scientists said Thursday.

Just weeks ago, much of the state was parched with varying levels of drought. But the same drenching rainfall that paralyzed parts of Houston and swept away a vacation home with eight people inside also offered relief from a long dry spell.

Many cities were still in danger of flooding as heavy rain from earlier in the week poured downstream, pushing rivers over their banks.

“There’s so much water in Texas and Oklahoma that it’s going to take quite a while for those rivers to recede,” said Mark Wiley, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Fort Worth, Texas.

If normal amounts of precipitation return, rivers will probably drop to average levels by the Fourth of July, he said.

“Six months ago, we were dying for this stuff,” he said. “And now we’re saying, ‘Please, please stop.'”

On Wednesday, the Houston area got a respite from the rain, but by Thursday runoff from earlier in the week had lifted the San Jacinto River above flood stage, and it kept climbing. Nearby residents watched the high water with alarm.

“We came back out here today to get a few of our things that we had parked by the road,” said Brian Harmon, who lives in suburban Kingwood. “The water keeps rising and rising. We didn’t want to lose anything else.”

Harmon’s home had up to 2 feet of water. Nearby streets had water rushing over them.

“It’s very stressful,” he said. “I’m very tired of it.”

About 60 miles southwest of Houston, the mayor of Wharton asked residents to voluntarily evacuate about 300 homes because of the predicted rise of the Colorado River.

And in the rural Parker County community of Horseshoe Bend, some 40 miles southwest of Fort Worth, officials asked people in 250 homes to flee from the Brazos River.

By early Thursday, Parker County Emergency Management spokesman Joel Kertok said the Brazos had almost crested, but officials had no immediate reports of flooded homes and were monitoring the situation.

He said the river, which has a flood level of 21 feet, was at nearly 24 feet.

This week’s storms and floods in Texas and Oklahoma have left at least 24 people dead and at least 14 others missing.

In Miami, President Barack Obama said the flooding should serve as a reminder of the need to make the nation more resilient against natural disasters. He said climate change is affecting both the pace and intensity of storms.

“The best scientists in the world are telling us that extreme weather events, like hurricanes, are likely to become more powerful,” Obama said during the first visit of his presidency to the National Hurricane Center.

“When you combine stronger storms with rising seas, that’s a recipe for more devastating floods,” he said.

In Central Texas, search crews continued looking for the eight people feared dead after the swollen Blanco River smashed through Wimberley, a small tourist town between San Antonio and Austin, over the Memorial Day weekend. Authorities there are concerned that more rain forecast for the region could hamper the search.

The Hays County emergency management coordinator, Kharley Smith, said more rain could shift debris fields and complicate efforts to find entangled victims.

A portion of the San Jacinto on Thursday was at nearly 53 feet, about 4 feet above flood stage, said Kim Jackson, a spokeswoman for the Harris County Flood Control District.

A neighbor was helping Joy Rizzi build a concrete barrier Thursday at the rear of her home north of Houston near the San Jacinto. She was hoping the barrier would prevent debris carried by the rising river from damaging her home. Rizzi planned to move her car to higher ground, but she was staying put.

“I’ll stay because I don’t want to leave my home,” she said.

Chuck Bayne was among those who decided to follow authorities’ advice and leave his North Texas home in Horseshoe Bend. On Wednesday, Bayne, owner of the Brazos RV Resort, headed to his second home in Arlington.

“Everybody on the river is leaving, except you have a couple dozen who aren’t leaving,” he said. “They’re afraid of looters, and some are just plain stubborn.”

Farther west, about 20 homes flooded after waters rose at Lake Leon. Fire Chief Darrell Fox said officials had asked for voluntary evacuations of 100 to 150 homes around the lake, which is 100 miles southwest of Fort Worth.

In Wharton, the Colorado River is expected to crest at about 45.5 feet, nearly 7 feet above flood stage, by either late Friday or early Saturday.

“We’ve made a tour of the area, and a lot of the people have taken heed of our warnings and are moving out,” Wharton Mayor Domingo Montalvo Jr. said Thursday. The city has opened a shelter, but so far only one person is staying at the facility.

Associated Press